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Organic Chemistry !"""  Organic chemistry is the chemistry of the compounds of carbon.  (Allotropic forms of carbon: diamond, graphite, fullerenes.)

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Presentation on theme: "Organic Chemistry !"""  Organic chemistry is the chemistry of the compounds of carbon.  (Allotropic forms of carbon: diamond, graphite, fullerenes.)"— Presentation transcript:

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4 Organic Chemistry !"""  Organic chemistry is the chemistry of the compounds of carbon.  (Allotropic forms of carbon: diamond, graphite, fullerenes.)  Inorganic Chemistry:The chemistry of the other ~100 elements.

5 Allotropes Allotropes are different forms of the same element. Different bonding arrangements between atoms result in different structures with different chemical and physical properties

6 Historical reason for division: The sources of chemicals for early chemical investigations (last quarter of 18th and first quarter of 19th centuries) were: animal, vegetable, mineral. Organic chemicals, those from living organisms (animal,vegetable) were complex and contained C, H, and often N and/or O. Inorganic chemicals (mineral) were simpler, could contain a variety of elements, but only rarely carbon, except for carbonates.

7 It seemed that inorganic sources of carbon ( carbonate,cyanide, carbon dioxide, etc.) could not be converted into organic compounds. This lead to the vital force theory. Vital Force Theory: only living organisms can convert carbon containing inorganic compounds to organic compounds.

8  VITALISM – A BELIEF IN A LIFE FORCE THAT IS OUTSIDE THE JURISDICTION OF CHEMICAL AND PHYSICAL LAWS.  SCIENTISTS FEEL THAT THEY HAVE DISPROVED VITALISM BY SYTHESIZING VARIOUS ORGANIC COMPOUNDS IN A LAB

9 Friedrich Wöhler, 1828 --- Ammonium Cyanate ___heat_____> Urea ( an inorganic compound) ( organic compound) Jon Jacob Berzelius 1807---- Coined the term organic chemistry Berzelius was interested in cases where two different materials had the same elemental composition and developed the term isomerism to define it

10  1928 – FREDERICK WOHLER WAS ABLE TO SYNTHESIZE UREA  HERMAN KOLBE – WAS ABLE TO SYNTHESIZE ACETIC ACID  1953 – STANLEY MILLER HETEROTROPH HYPOTHESIS: HYDROGEN, WATER, AMMONIA, AND METHANE (RECREATE PRIMITIVE EARTH)

11 Organic chemicals make up Foods and foodstuff Flavours and fragrances Medicines Materials, polymers, plastics Plant, animal and microbial matter; natural products A vast range of manufactured goods [pharmaceuticals, foods, dyestuffs, adhesives, coatings, packaging, lubricants, cosmetics, films & fibres, etc. etc.]

12 Some organic chemicals

13 3 Main Concepts of organic Chemistry 1. Stereochemistry 2. Functional groups 3. Curved arrow notation ( shows flow of electrons and where bonds form) Reactivity in organic chemistry is based on flow of electrons, if you understand where the electrons are and where they are going then you can figure out how a chemical reaction occurs.

14 Aspects of organic molecules Structure & bonding Atom to atom connectivity 3D shape (Stereochemistry) Naming (Nomenclature) Physical properties Interaction with physical world Chemical properties Transformation of molecular structure (Reactions) How reactions occur (Mechanism)

15  THE STRUCTURAL AND FUNCTIONAL DIVERSTITY OF ORGANIC MOLECULES IS THE ABILITY OF CARBON TO FORM LARGE COMPLEX COMPOUNDS BY BONDING TO ITSELF AND OTHER ELEMENTS

16 VERSITILITY OF THE CARBON ATOM ATOMIC NUMBER IS 6 4 VALENCE ELECTRONS TETRAVALENT: In a tetrahedral molecular geometry the carbon atom is located at the center with four elements that are located at the corners. The bond angles are 109.5°bond angles COMPLETES THE OUTER SHELL BY FORMING 4 COVALENT BONDS MAKES LARGE COMP LEX MOLECULES POSSIBLE by forming chains, branches or cyclic compounds

17 3 Dimensional shape of the molecule has tetrahedral carbons Angle formed by any two bonds to any atom = ~ 109.5 o

18 109.5  Need to be able to represent 3D molecular structure in 2D

19 Angle between any two bonds at a Carbon atom = 109.5 o

20 e.g. = Or =

21 VARIATIONS OF ORGANIC MOLECULES LENGTH SHAPE NUMBER AND LOCATION OF DOUBLE BONDS OTHER ELEMENTS COVALENTLY BONDED TO AVAILABLE SITES

22 HYDROCARBONS HYDROGEN AND CARBON ONLY STORE LARGE AMOUNTS OF ENERGY MAJOR COMPONENT OF FOSSIL FUELS MANY ORGANIC COMPOUNDS CONTAIN REGIONS OF HYDROCARBON CHAINS HYDROPHOBIC – C-C AND C-H, BONDS ARE NON-POLAR VERY DIVERSE IN STRUCTURE

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24 Isomers Isomers are organic molecules having the same chemical formula but a different structural formula. The animation above shows that atoms are rearranged in the molecule to create different isomers. Butane has two isomers. Both butane and 2-methylpropane have the same chemical formula but a different structural formula..

25 ISOMERS COMPOUNDS WITH THE SAME MOLECULAR FORMULA BUT DIFFERENT STRUCTURAL FORMULA CONSEQUENTLY – DIFFERENT PROPERTIES

26 THREE TYPES OF ISOMERS STRUCTURAL ISOMER – VARIATION IN COVALENT ARRANGEMENT OR MAY ALSO DIFFER IN THE LOCATION OF DOUBLE BONDS

27 GEOMETRIC ISOMER THE SAME COVALENT PARTNER BUT DIFFER IN THE SPATIAL ARRANGEMENT AROUND THE DOUBLE BOND. SUBTLE DIFFERENCE WILL AFFECT BIOLOGICAL ACTIVITY

28 ENANTIOMERS ISOMER THAT IS A MIRROR IMAGE OF ITSELF. USSUALLY ONE WILL BE ACTIVE AND ONE INACTIVE CAN OCCUR WHEN 4 DIFFERENT ATOMS ARE ATTACHED TO THE SAME (ASYMMETRIC) CARBON

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30 FUNCTIONAL GROUPS CONTRIBUTE TO MOLECULAR DIVERSTIY SPECIFIC CHEMICAL AND PHYSICAL PROPERTIES USSUALLY CHEMICALLY ACTIVE CONSISTENT BEHAVIOR FROM ONE ORGANIC MOLECULE TO ANOTHER DETERMINES THE UNIQUE PROPERTIES OF AN ORGANIC MOLECULE

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32 Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.1 | 32 The Main Functional Groups

33 Structure of the Atom Atoms consist of: Protons (+) ( atomic number) Neutrons (neutral) Electrons (-) Protons and neutrons are in the nucleus and have similar masses (p + n = atomic weight) Atoms with the same number of protons but different neutrons are called ISOTOPES. E.g. 12 C (major isotope) 13 C (~1%, used in carbon NMR) ( nuclear magnetic resonance) 14 C (radioactive, used in Carbon dating) Almost all the mass of an atom is in the nucleus, but it is the electrons that are involved in the chemical bonding and reactions of an atom.

34 Electronic Structure of the Atom Electrons are located in orbitals around a nucleus, but the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle tells us that we cannot pinpoint exactly where the electron is. So we use the term ELECTRON DENSITY, which is the probability of finding the electron in a particular part of the orbital. ORBITAL: is an allowed energy state for an electron, with an associated probability function that defines the distribution of electron density in space.

35 Electronic Configuration of Atoms The Aufbau Principle tells us how to ‘build up’ a ground state (most stable) configuration, which is to fill the orbitals in order, until the correct number of electrons have been added. Hund’s rule states that when there are two or more degenerate orbitals available, electrons would rather go into different orbitals rather than the same one.

36 Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.1 | 36 Electron Arrangements of the First 18 elements

37 valence electrons The valence electrons are those in the outermost shell. (Periodic group number is the number of valence electrons).

38 reserved.1 | 38 Valence Electrons of the First 18 Elements

39 Bonding Atoms transfer or share electrons in such a way as to attain a filled shell of electrons – The OCTET rule. A filled shell is also known as a noble gas configuration.

40 Ionic Bonding The transfer of one or more electrons from one atom to another. (loss or gain of electrons) ( between metal and nonmetal) ( when the substance dissolves, the ions separate and are able to move about in solution relatively freely) Electropositive (cation) gives up an electron Electronegative (anion) accepts the electron Na + …… Cl -

41 Covalent Bonding The electrons are shared, not transferred. ( between nonmetals) H + H → H:H Covalent is the most important bonding in Organic Chemistry.

42 Lewis Structures Each electron is represented by a dot. A pair of electrons by two dots, or a dash.(showing a bond has occurred)

43 Non bonding pairs of electrons Also known as lone pairs Lone pairs often dictate a molecule’s reactivity.

44 Multiple Bonds The sharing of one pair of electrons is a single bond. The sharing of two pairs gives a double bond. The sharing of three pairs gives a triple bond In neutral organic compounds: Carbon forms four bonds Nitrogen forms three bonds (and a lone pair) Oxygen forms two bonds

45 A covalent bond, where the electrons are shared equally is called a non-polar bond. (E.g. H-H) Bonds between different atoms usually result in the electrons being attracted to one atom more strongly than the other. Such an unequal sharing of the pair of bonding electrons results in a POLAR bond. This competition for electron density is scaled by ELECTRONEGATIVITY values. Elements with higher electronegativity values have greater attraction for bonding electrons Electronegativity group trends: elements become less electronegative as move down a group on the periodic table

46 Polar Covalent bonds Most reactivity relates here. They still have octet ( 8 valence electrons) but not sharing the electrons equally. This gives rise to lots of reactivity in organic chemistry. Ex H-F unequal sharing of electrons.. so polar covalent Reason: F is more electronegative than H ( F= 4.0 and H = 2.2) So electrons spend more time with F so F is partially negative and H is partially positive

47 Delta = partial H-F H= delta + and F = delta – The electronegativity of carbon is 2.5 and Hydrogen is 2.2 so together they are non polar Ionic, covalent ( polar and nonpolar) depends on electronegativity

48 Electronegativity A good measure of polar covalent bond or ionic bond. Polar covalent bonds have an electronegativity difference less than 2 (1.5) Ionic bonds have an electronegativity difference greater than 2 (1.5) Nonpolar bonds: have an electronegativity difference less than 0.5

49 Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.1 | 49 Electronegativities of Some Common Elements

50 Electronegativity Pauling Scale Trends are for electronegativity to decrease down the periodic table and increase across the table. Ex NaCl Na=.9 Cl = 3.4 greater than 2 so ionic Ex HF H=2.2 F =4.0 less than 2 so polar

51 So what if we have a bond between carbon and oxygen Carbon is less electronegative than oxygen so carbon has a partial positive charge (delta +) and O has a partial negative charge (delta-)

52 Valences of Common Electrons The valence of an element is the number of bonds that atom of the element can form. The valence applies to whether the bonds are single double or triple

53 Resonance structures Are 2 or more structures with identical arrangements of the atoms but different arrangements of the electrons. The true structure of the molecule is a hybrid of the resonance structures We use double headed arrows between contributing structures to distinguish resonance from an equilibrium reaction which uses reversable arrows

54 Abbreviated Structural Formulas: 1. Full structural formula: example for octane…Can also do shortcuts: CH 3 -(CH 2 ) 6 -CH 3 2. Condensed structural formula. 3. Line segment structural formula

55 Line segment structural formula for octane Each line represents a covalent bond between atoms Unless indicated otherwise, assume bonds are between Carbons C-H bonds not shown, assume they are present [so as make up valency of Carbon to 4]

56 Arrow Formalism Arrows in chemical drawings have specific meanings. 1. Curved arrows: used to show how electrons are moved in resonance structures and in reactions

57 Curved arrow Notation A curved arrow with half a head is called a fishhook. And indicates the movement of single electrons, two fishhooks are used to show the movement of two electrons Straight arrows point from reactant to product in the chemical reaction equation Double headed straight arrows indicate resonance structures

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62 Atomic Orbitals These are different shells at differing distances away from the nucleus. Each has a principal quantum number (n). As n increases, Shells are further from the nucleus Higher energy Can hold more electrons n=1 can hold 2 electrons, n=2 can hold 8 electrons

63 Each orbital contains a maximum of 2 electrons. The orbitals with different shapes are designed by letters s, p, and d In addition the orbitals are grouped in shells designated by the numbers 1,2,3 ect.. Each shell contains differnet types and numbers of orbitals, corresponding to the shell number. Ex shell 1 has 1s, shell 2 has 2s, 2d, shell 3 has 3s, 3p 3d ect

64 Numbers of Orbitals and electrons in the First Three Shells

65 An sp 3 orbital extends mainly in one direction from the nucleus and forms bonds with other atoms in that direction. It is a p shaped orbital that is one part s and three parts p in character

66 Carbon sp 3 orbitals can overlap with Hydrogen 1s orbitals to form Carbon-Hydrogen  bonds  bonds: symmetrical about the bond axis [Anti-bonding orbitals also formed; not occupied by electrons] Each sp 3 orbital contributes one electron; each s orbital contributes one electron to form C-H [C.. H]

67 Geometry of Carbon in ethane is tetrahedral and is based upon sp 3 hybridisation sp 3 hybridised Carbon = tetrahedral Carbon Tetrahedral angle  109.5 o

68 This represents a particular orientation of the C-H bonds on adjacent Carbons View along C-C bond: Newman projection Can select one C-H bond on either carbon and define a dihedral angle or torsional angle (φ) φ

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70 φ = 60 o Staggered conformation Minimum energy conformation (least crowded possible conformation) C-C  bonds: symmetrical about the bond axes. In principle, no barrier to rotation about C-C bond Could have φ = 0 o Eclipsed conformation Maximum energy conformation (most crowded possible conformation) =

71 Eclipsed conformation experiences steric hindrance Unfavourable interaction between groups which are close together in space Steric hindrance exists between the eclipsing C- H bonds in this conformation These unfavourable interactions absent in the staggered conformation Hence, the staggered conformation is lower in energy Energy difference between eclipsed and staggered conformations of ethane = 12 kJ mol - 1

72 Conformations:different orientations of molecules arising from rotations about C-C  bonds Consider one full rotation about the C-C bond in ethane Start at φ = 0  (eclipsed conformation) Each C-H eclipsing interaction contributes 4 kJ mol -1 of torsional strain energy Total: 12 kJ mol -1 torsional strain

73 φ = 0  Rotate 60  Eclipsed conformation strain energy 12 kJ mol -1 φ = 60  Staggered conformation strain energy 0 kJ mol -1 Rotate 60  φ = 120  Eclipsed conformation strain energy 12 kJ mol -1

74 Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.1 | 74 Various Structural diagrams: 1. Ball and Stick Representations: emphasizes the bonds that connect atoms

75 Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.1 | 75 2. space-filling models: showing the approximate volume of the entire molecule

76 Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.1 | 76 3. Electrostatic potential (ESP) view: shows distribution of electrons in a molecule, red= neg charge, blue = positive charge

77 Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.1 | 77 Classification According to molecular framework:.1. Acyclic: not cyclic, chains of carbon but no rings

78 Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.1 | 78 2. carbocyclic compounds with rings of various sizes and shapes.

79 Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.1 | 79 3. heterocyclic compounds having a variety of heteroatoms and ring sizes.


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